SHORT CHRISTIAN READINGS SELECTED FOR FORMER JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES



Jehovah's Witnesses and the Wholly Other Holy Spirit

By Tim Martin


The Watchtower Bible and Tract Society teaches that the Holy Spirit is God's active force on the earth today. If this statement is taken alone, most Christians might agree to it. However, along with the above statement, the Watchtower also teaches that the Holy Spirit is not a person, but only a force, comparable to "wind or radio beams."1

A Biblical examination of their arguments shows that they are twisting the facts to validate this heresy.

Upon studying various years of Watchtower publications,one can see five key arguments used to teach their aberrant views on the Holy Spirit:

1- No name

2- Use of neuter pronouns

3- Historical Arguments

4- Impersonal references

5- Personification

No Name

"The Holy Scriptures tell us the personal name of the Father-Jehovah. They inform us that the Son is Jesus Christ. But no wherein the Scriptures is a personal name applied to the holy spirit."2

This quotation from the Watchtower is correct that the Holy Spirit does not have a personal name recorded in Scripture. However, this does not mean that He is not a person. If this were a valid argument, then one could suppose that a newborn child is not a person until he/she is named. In addition, Scripture does not record personal names for most of the demons it mentions, who are, nevertheless, personal. A name does not imply personality or impersonality. Therefore, the lack of a name for the Holy Spirit does not prove impersonality. The Watchtower admits that the Greek word for spirit (pneuma) is used of the demons.3

Why would these nameless beings called "spirits" be persons, and the nameless Holy Spirit not be a person? The Watchtower argument is flawed.

Use of Neuter Pronouns:

"Nowhere do we read of Jehovah God and Jesus as being referred to by neuter pronouns, which is the case in regard to the holy spirit. 'It is the Spirit of Truth. The world cannot obtain that Spirit, because it does not see it or recognize it; you recognize it because it stays with you and is within you.' (John 14:16,17, AT; Acts 2:33).4

This is further borne out by the frequent lack of the definite article before holy spirit, such as at Acts 2:4 (NW): 'And they all became filled with holy spirit.'"5

Sometimes, as here, the Watchtower will refer to the Greek text to prove their point. Since very few people know Greek, they are unable to know if the arguments are true or not.

In Greek and English, words are either masculine, feminine or neuter. The Watchtower states that since the Bible uses neuter pronouns to describe the Holy Spirit, He must be an it and not a He. They would be correct to say that Spirit (pneuma) in Greek is a neuter form. However, the neuter in Greek does not imply personhood or non-personhood. For example, the word in Greek translated "demon" (daimonion) is also neuter. Demons are persons, though the Greek word is neuter. Also,the Greek word for child is neuter. In Greek, the personal pronoun must match the gender of the object it is referring to. Therefore, the Holy Spirit has neuter pronouns. However, scholars translate the Greek neuter pronouns as the English masculine pronoun "He" in the above verses to keep with the rules of English.

Even if the above was not true, at times, the Bible does use masculine personal pronouns for the Holy Spirit. In John 16:13 the demonstrative pronoun "that one" (ekeino) is used in the masculine to refer to the Holy Spirit. This may seem to conflict with the rule given above about the pronoun agreeing in gender with the noun. However, this is a figure of speech called heterosis. Heterosis is the use of one gender in the place of another to emphasize something. What Jesus is emphasizing here is that the Holy Spirit is a person.

The second part of the Watchtower's argument above is that the frequent lack of the definite article before Holy Spirit indicates that He is not a person. Their New World Translation renders Acts 2:4 as"filled with holy spirit" instead of "filled with the Holy Spirit"as in most all other versions. The reason given is that the Greek text does not have a definite article before Holy Spirit. Again, the Watchtower misrepresents the rules of Greek grammar. Not only do they misrepresent Greek rules, they also contradict themselves in other Watchtower books.The Kingdom Interlinear Translation of the Greek Scriptures, published by the Watchtower, argues that nouns without a definite article in the Greek should be translated with the English indefinite article (p. 1139). If they were consistent, they would have to translate Acts 2:4 as "filled with a holy spirit" which would give them even further problems identifying the Holy Spirit.

Greek words without the definite article can be translated with the English definite article. In Greek, the definite article usually meant that the word it modified was the subject of the sentence.In English, that is not true. In John 1:1 we read "In the beginning was the word," (NASB). The Greek text does not have an article before "beginning"because it considers "word" as the subject. However, because of the way English grammar works, we translate it definite: "the beginning."

Historical Arguments

"Not until the fourth century C.E. did the teaching that the holy spirit was a person and part of the 'Godhead' become official church dogma. Early church 'fathers' did not so teach."6

Even if this were true, it would not prove anything. What the Watchtower wants to do, is say that since early church fathers did not teach that the Holy Spirit is a person, then the doctrine was a later development.If the doctrine was a later development, then it could not have its source in the Bible. This is an argument from silence. The lack of early writings on this subject would not prove that it is not Biblical. God's revelation of truth is established in the Bible, and man's comprehension of that truth can be incomplete, and subject to growth. The Watchtower's argument that to be biblically true a doctrine must have been taught frequently by early church leaders is simply not valid. The weight of the arguments need to fall solely on Biblical evidence.

The early Church fathers believed that the Holy Spirit is a person, although not much was said about this subject in early writings. Most of the Church fathers' writings were against heresies. Since no significant heretical movements denying the personality of the Holy Spirit arose before the fourth century, earlier church fathers had little to say on the subject.7

Occasionally, some early fathers did mention that the Holy Spirit is a person. Tertullian lived from 155-220 A.D., and said that the Holy Spirit is a person. Hippolytus taught around 215 A.D. that "He [the Spirit] too is a person," (Kelly p. 113).

Impersonal references

On the day of Pentecost its [the Holy Spirit's] operation was accompanied by a 'noise just like that of a rushing stiff breeze' and by visible 'tongues as if of fire' sitting on the heads of each of the 120 Christian disciples into whom it came, to fill them and make them talk with languages that they had never learned. (Acts 2:1-16) Like the wind or like radio beams, God's active force was unseen, but what it produced was seeable and hearable.8

The Watchtower often cites passages such as these and reasons that a person cannot possibly do what is described here. "A comparison of Bible texts that refer to the holy spirit shows that it is spoken of as 'filling' people; they can be 'baptized' with it; and they can be 'anointed' with it. (Luke 1:41; Matt. 3:11; Acts 10:38) None of these expressions would be appropriate if the holy spirit were a person."9

First of all, the word translated with in Matt.3:11, "He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire," (NASB) maybe correctly translated in, with, or by. Even the Watchtower translates the identical word as by in 1 Cor. 12:13: "For truly by one spirit we were all baptized." (NWT).

Can a person perform such acts as described above? Yes. The first quote from Acts 2 described the Holy Spirit as a "noise just like that of a rushing stiff breeze." It is common in the Bible for the activity of God to be compared to acts of nature. For example, when God acted it was often compared to thunder.  2 Samuel 22:14 says "from heaven Jehovah began to thunder," (NWT).

Another Watchtower argument above is that a person could not fill people or things, only a substance can. However, the Watchtower's own New World Translation renders Jeremiah 23:24 as "is it not the heavens and the earth that I myself [Jehovah] fill?" This is not teaching that Jehovah can just go anywhere in the heavens or earth, but that He actually fills the space. If Jehovah is a person and "fills" everything, then why can not the Holy Spirit have this same ability? Also, Jesus is said to have "ascended far above all the heavens, that He might fill all things,"(Eph. 4:10, NASB). (NWT renders Eph. 4:10 as "give fullness to all things." The Greek word for fill is the same in Acts 2:2 as it is in Ephesians 4:10.) True, a normal person can not perform most of the functions that the Watchtower uses to disprove the personality of the Holy Spirit. However,if the person is God, as is the Holy Spirit, then He can perform these functions in the same way as the Father and the Son.

Personification

The Watchtower does admit that there are Bible passages that speak of the Holy Spirit in personal terms. However, they teach that these are merely "personifications." Personification is the attributing of personal characteristics to inanimate objects for effect. They fail to understand that personifications are used for a specific purpose in writing. An author will use a personification to drive home a point vividly. For example, the Watchtower is correct to point out a personification in Romans 5:17 that says "by the trespass of the one man, death reigned through that one man." Death is personified by the word reign. An impersonal object such as death cannot actually perform action such as reign. What we need to ask here is, what is this personification telling us, or what is the authors point? The answer is that death is described as being absolute and complete in a person's life. When a king reigns, his edicts are taken as absolute, with no questions asked. Death is colorfully described by likening it to the power of a king. When death speaks, its rule is final, no questions asked.

If the Holy Spirit were truly not a person, why would He be spoken of with personification? One must wonder at this point what the authors of scripture were trying to graphically illustrate by referring to the Holy Spirit as a person. Some scriptures that the Watchtower uses to explain personifications are, "Isaiah said that certain rebels 'made God's holy spirit feel hurt.' (Isaiah 63:10) Paul said it could be 'grieved.' (Ephesians 4:30) And a number of scriptures say that the holy spirit teaches,guides, speaks, and bears witness. (John 14:26; 16:13, 14; 1 John 5:7,8)." 10 One must wonder why these authors are using personification if the Holy Spirit were not a person? Are they trying to say that man's offenses against God are so bad that it makes God's active force feel emotion? Or maybe one should understand them plainly, as giving every reason to accept that the Holy Spirit is a person? If there are no other reasons to think that the Holy Spirit is not a person, maybe these statements should be taken at face value. 

The first question that must be asked when wanting to know if the Holy Spirit is a person is. What is a person? A person has a mind. The Holy Spirit has a mind because 1 Corinthians 2:10-11 describes Him as having thoughts. A person has emotions. As pointed out earlier,the Holy Spirit is described as having the emotion of being grieved. A person has a will. In 1 Corinthians 12:11, the Holy Spirit is said to give gifts to each person "just as He wills." The Bible also records instances where people treat the Holy Spirit as a person. For example, Ananias and Sapphira lied to the Holy Spirit in Acts 5:3. It would make no sense here to believe that the Holy Spirit was not a person. How would someone lie to a force like wind or radio waves? This is unthinkable and illogical. Christian theologian Millard Erickson points out that "the Holy Spirit engages in moral actions and ministries which can be performed only by a person. Among these activities are teaching, regenerating, searching, speaking, interceding, commanding, testifying, guiding, illuminating, revealing." 11 Whenever the Watchtower attacks the personality of the Holy Spirit, it is never completely clear what it is they are saying He is not. They claim that Jehovah is a person,12 but they do not describe exactly what this means. If they did enumerate the qualifications for personhood, then it could be seen that the Holy Spirit is a person.

To support its doctrine of the Holy Spirit, the Watchtower twists scripture, misrepresents rules of Greek grammar, and misrepresents historical teaching. After examining the above discussions, one can see that the Watchtower uses fallacious reasoning and deceptive tactics to promote its heresy. If one knows what a person is, and observes the characteristics of the Holy Spirit in the Bible, the result is obvious. The Holy Spirit can be nothing less than a person.

1 "Overseers in Apocalyptic Times," The Watchtower, January 15, 1958, pp. 42-3.

2 Reasoning From the Scriptures, New York: Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, 1989, pp. 406-7.

3 Insight on the Scriptures, NewYork: Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, 1989, pp. 612.

4 AT stands for "The Complete Bible - An American Translation" by J.M. Powis Smith and Edgar J. Goodspeed. 1939; the Society refers to the edition printed in 1951.

5 "The Scriptures, Reason and the Trinity,"The Watchtower, 1 Jan. 1953, pp. 23-4.

6 Insight, pp. 1019.

7 J.N.D. Kelly, Early Christian Doctrines, California: Harper Row, 1978, p. 252.

8 "Overseers in Apocalyptic Times," pp.42-3.

9 Reasoning, pp. 380-1.

10 "The Scriptures and the Holy Spirit," The Watchtower, January 15, 1991 pp. 3-4.

11 Erickson, Millard J., Christian Theology, Michigan: Baker Book House, 1985, p. 862.

12 Insight, p. 1018.


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THE HOLY SPIRIT

Author Unknown

(edited)

The Jehovah's Witnesses are taught that the Holy Spirit is "God's impersonal active force." Therefore, in their Bible, the name "holy spirit" is printed in small letters. They do not believe that the Holy Spirit is a Person, nor do they acknowledge Him as God - the third Person of the Trinity.

The historic orthodox Christian Church has always held to the Biblically based belief that the Holy Spirit is a Person and that He is as much God as are the Father and Son.

THE HOLY SPIRIT IS A PERSON

The Watchtower publication, AWAKE! December 8, 1973, p.27, explains how the Bible reveals that Satan the Devil is a real person. The magazine made this definitive statement:

"You will note, too, that these accounts relate conversations between the Devil and God, and between the Devil and Jesus Christ. Both Jehovah God and Jesus Christ are persons. Also, the Bible calls Satan a manslayer, a liar, a father (in a spiritual sense) and a ruler. Only an intelligent person could fit all these descriptions."

We can likewise apply the Society's above criteria to the Holy Spirit:

The Holy Spirit spoke to people:

-- Acts 8:29 - "and the spirit said to Philip, "go up and join the chariot."

-- Acts 10:19,20 - "The Spirit said to Peter, "Behold, three men are looking for you."

-- Ezekiel 3:24 - "Then the spirit entered into me, and set me upon my feet, and spake with me, and said unto me, Go, shut thyself within thine house."

Philip, Peter and Ezekiel are PERSONS. Can an unintelligent force speak to people?

Also, the Holy Spirit:

-- Can be grieved, can be lied to, is a helper, is a guide, teaches, testifies, prophecies, makes a decree, can be blasphemed and has a mind. All of these traits are personal in nature.

So the same guidelines that are used to prove that Satan is a real person can be used to prove the personality of the Holy Spirit!

GRAMMATICAL PROOF

The rules of Greek grammar demonstrate the personality of the Holy Spirit.

Before getting into the details, here is a brief overview for those of us who need a "refresher" on grammar in general :

A PERSONAL pronoun can be "he" (masculine), "she" (feminine, or "it" (neuter).

A RELATIVE pronoun such as "this one" or "that one" are classified as masculine, feminine or neuter, depending on its antecedent, i.e., the word which it refers to.

In the Bible, the following verses that refer to the Holy Spirit use the relative pronoun "that one" in the original Greek. The word is "ekeinos". The last 2 letters, "-os," denotes that the word is in the MASCULINE gender. (The Society's Kingdom Interlinear shows this.)

John 14:26 - Another helper..."he" (that one - ekeinos - masc.) will teach.

John 15:26 - the spirit of the truth ...."he" (that one - ekeinos - masc.) will bear witness.

John 16:13 - the spirit of the truth ..."he" (that one - ekeinos - masc.) will guide.

The relative pronoun "that one" can have 3 different endings in the Greek:

"-os" (masculine)

"-oi" (feminine)

"-o" (neuter)

If the Holy Spirit was an impersonal "it", as in an "active force," then the Greek would have been "EKEINO." Yet the inspired Greek writers were fully aware that they were referring to a person.

THE HOLY SPIRIT IS GOD

"COMPARING SCRIPTURE WITH SCRIPTURE"

It is my firm belief that the Bible verses below reveal the personality and the Deity of the Holy Spirit. The apostle Paul advised us to take in the WHOLE counsel of God (Acts 20:27), therefore it is considered wise to compare scripture with scripture to arrive at Biblical conclusions. All Scripture verses are taken from the Society's New world Translation.

The Holy Spirit participated in the creation of man. Job said in Job 33:4:

" The Spirit of God hath made me, ..."

Only GOD created man!

Genesis 1:26, 27 says: "Then God said, "Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness; let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds of the air, and over the cattle, over all[1] the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth." So God created man in His own image; in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them."

Acts 5: 3, 4 says: "But Peter said: "Ananias, why has Satan emboldened you to play false to the holy spirit and to hold back secretly some of the price of the field?" ... "As long as it remained with you did it not remain yours, and after it was sold did it not continue in your control? Why was it that you purposed such a deed as this in your heart? You have played false, not to men, but to God."

The apostle Peter draws a parallel here. In verse 3 Peter told nAanias that he lied to the Holy Spirit. Can something "impersonal" be lied to? In verse 4 Peter reiterates his accusation more strongly and emphasizes that the Holy Spirit who Ananias lied to was actually God!

Compare Isaiah 6: 9,10 with Acts 28:26-27

Isaiah 6: 9,10: JEHOVAH said:

"Go and you must say to this people: "Hear again and again, O men, but do not understand, and see again and again, but do not get any knowledge. Make the heart of this people unreceptive, and make their very ears unresponsive, and paste their very eyes together, that they may not see with their eyes and with their ears they may not hear, and that their own heart may not understand and that they may not actually turn back and get healing for themselves."

Acts 28: 26,27:

"The HOLY SPIRIT aptly spoke through Isaiah the prophet to your forefathers saying: 

"Go to this people and say, "By hearing you will hear but by no means understand, and looking you will look, but by no means see."

"For the heart of this people has grown unreceptive, and with their ears they have heard without response, and they have shut their eyes; that they should never see with their eyes and hear with their ears and understand with their heart and turn back, and I should heal them."

The New World Translation in its center column references cites that this quote in Acts is from the Isaiah verses. These words were uttered only once - by Jehovah God. Attributing these statements, in the New Testament, as being spoken by the Holy Spirit puts the Spirit in the same classication of being God in His nature.

Compare Psalm 95: 9-11 with Hebrews 3: 7-11

Psalm 95: 9-11:

JEHOVAH said:

"When your forefathers put me to the proof; They examined me, they also saw my activity.

For forty years I kept feeling a loathing toward [that] generation,And I proceeded to say:"They are a people wayward at heart,And they themselves have not come to know my ways";

Concerning whom I swore in my anger: "They shall not enter into my resting-place."

Hebrews 3: 7-11

The HOLY SPIRIT said:

"For this reason, just as the holy spirit says: "Today if YOU people listen to his own voice, do not harden your hearts as on the occasion of causing bitter anger, as in the day of making the test in the wilderness, in which your forefathers made a test of me with a trial, and yet they had seen my works for forty years. For this reason I became disgusted with this generation and said, 'They always go astray in their hearts, and they themselves have not come to know my ways.' So I swore in my anger, 'They shall not enter into my rest.'"

The New World Translation attributes the source of these words as coming from the Psalms veses above. Again, the words spoken by the Holy Spirit are attributed to those of Jehovah. The Holy Spirit is God.

Compare Jeremiah 31:33,34 with Hebrews 10:15-17

Jeremiah 31: 33,34:

JEHOVAH said:

"For this is the covenant that I shall conclude with the house of Israel after those days," is the utterance of Jehovah. "I will put my law within them, and in their heart I shall write it. And I will become their God, and they themselves will become my people.

And they will no more teach each one his companion and each one his brother, saying, 'KNOW Jehovah!' for they will all of them know me, from the least one of them even to the greatest one of them," is the utterance of Jehovah. "For I shall forgive their error, and their sin I shall remember no more."

Hebrews 10: 15-17:

The HOLY SPIRIT said:

Moreover, the holy spirit also bears witness to us, for after it has said:

"'This is the covenant that I shall covenant toward them after those days,' says Jehovah. 'I will put my laws in their hearts, and in their minds I shall write them,'" [it says afterwards:] "And I shall by no means call their sins and their lawless deeds to mind anymore."

The Holy Spirit said the words that are ascribed to having beed spoken by Jehovah God.

I Corinth. 6:19

"What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own?"

The Kingdom Interlinear Translation renders "temple as "divine habitation", so that means it is a dwelling place for some sort of "god." We know from history that there were temples for pagan deities and other false gods. But in the Jewish culture, we read of the True God inhabiting their temple. If the Apostle Paul says that our bodies are temples, then does a false god or true God dwell there?

ROLES OF THE HOLY SPIRIT

Figuratively speaking, a person can be "filled," "poured out," "be entered," into another person.

"filled"

Galatians 2:20 "I have been crucified with Christ, and it is no longer I who lives, but Christ lives IN me."

II Corinth. 5:17 "If any man is IN Christ, he is a new creature."

Ephesians 5:18 "And do not be drunk with wine, in which is dissipation; but be filled with the Spirit,"

When Paul used the term being "filled," the Greek verb tense renders it as being CONTINUOUSLY filled. He was not giving an option or suggestion. His choice of words was framed as a command. We are to be continuously filled with the Spirit.

It is important to get the precise meaning of the word "filled" as Paul used it. He was not speaking of being filled UP; he had in mind the idea of being filled THROUGH, or permeated by the Holy Spirit's influence.

We often speak of people being "filled" with anger or "filled" with joy. We mean they're totally under the control of those emotions. That's what Paul had in mind - we are to be utterly controlled by the Holy Spirit.

"poured out"

Philippians 2:17 "But even I am being poured out as a drink offering."

II Timothy 4:6 "For I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand."

"entered into"

Luke 22:3 "And Satan entered into Judas."

(Satan is a person)

"baptized"

Romans 6:3 "Or do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus have been baptized into His death?"

Galatians 3:27 "For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ."

WATCHTOWER MISQUOTES

The Society's book "Reasoning From the Scriptures" quotes from the New Catholic Encyclopedia in regard to the identity of the Holy Spirit:

The "Reasoning..." book says on p. 407:<

"The Majority of the New Testament texts reveal that God's spirit is something, not someone; this is especially seen in the parallelism between the spirit and the power of God." (New Catholic Encyclopedia, 1967, Vol.XIII, p.575)

However, the Watchtower Society's writer(s) deliberately overlooked these other statements on the same page of the Encyclopedia:

"Although the New Testament concepts of the spirit of God are largely a continuation of those in th Old Testament, in the New Testament there is a gradual revelation that the Spirit of God is a Person."

"The Trinitarian formulas employed by St. Paul indicate a real personality."

"So clearly does St. John see in the Spirit a person who takes Christ's place in the Church, that he uses a masculine pronoun, "ekeinos," in reference to the Spirit."

The "Reasoning ..." book also makes this quote on p. 407:

"The Apologists [Greek Christian writers of the second century A.D.] spoke too haltingly of the Spirit; with a measure of anticipation, one might say too impersonally." (New Catholic Encyclopedia, 1967, Vol. XIV, p.296)

Once again, the Society has been very selective in their quotes and omitted these following statements on the same page of the Encyclopedia:

"The divine unity, Tertullian writes, is "disposed into trinity." (Against Praxeas, ch.2). From the same passage, it is clear that he thinks of the three as three individuals. Elsewhere, to designate the proper and distinct reality of both Son and Spirit, he introduces the word Person explicitly."

CONCLUSION:

Apparently the Bible can refer to the Holy Spirit as both a power and a person at one time. The primary function of the Spirit of God in the Old Testament is as "the spirit of prophecy." (inspiring force) - the motivation of prophets and their inspired message. The Holy Spirit as a person is not directly revealed until the New Testament writings.

OTHER STATEMENTS FROM THE EARLY CHURCH FATHERS

"And the Holy Spirit, either from the person of His Father, or from His own person, answers them, 'The Lord of hosts, He is this King of glory.'" Justin Martyr - Dialogue with Trypho, ch. 36

"And the Holy Spirit, either from the person of His Father, or from His own person, answers them, 'The Lord of hosts, He is this King of glory.'" Justin Martyr - Dialogue with Trypho, ch. 36

"[God speaks in the plural "Let us make man in our image] because already there was attached to Him his Son, a second person, his own Word, and a third, the Spirit in the Word....one substance in three coherent persons. He was at once the Father, the Son, and the Spirit." - Against Praxeas, ch. 12

"The Father is God, the Son is God, the Spirit is God. Each is God. Yet we have never given vent to the phrases 'Two Gods or Two Lords'." - Against Praxeas, ch. 13

"The connection of Father and Son, of Son and the Paraclete [Holy Spirit] makes three who cohere in a dependent series. And these three are one thing; not one person." - Against Praxeas, ch. 25

"The Son of God is identical with God. The Spirit of God is God." - Against Praxeas, ch. 26